DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY. 2l7 



Aves. — Fifty bird-bones from the caverns of Majorca 

 (D. M. A. Bate coll.). 



Reptilia. — Rostrum of Ichthyosaurus from the Lower Lias, 

 Wilmcote. 



Hind paddle of Ichthyosaurus longirostris from the Upper 

 Lias, Holzmaden, Wiii^'temberg. 



Skeleton of Pteranodon, portion of mandible and various 

 wing-bones of Pteranodon, and pectoral arch of a Mosasaur, 

 from the Chalk of Kansas (H. T. Martin coll.). 



Pisces. — Twenty-two Carboniferous fish-remains. 



A collection of about 760 specimens of Carboniferous and 

 Devonian fishes, made by the late Dr. R. H. Traquair, F.R.S. 



One Saurostomus esocinus and one Caturus sp. from the 

 Upper Lias, Holzmaden, Wiirtemberg. 



One Selachian {Crossorhinus ?) from the Lithographic 

 Stone, Bavaria. 



Twelve fossil fishes from the Chalk of Kent, including the 

 mandible of Gyrodus cretaceus described and figured by 

 A. S. Woodward, "Fossil Fishes of the English Chalk" (1911), 

 p. 251, pi. liv., fig. 6. 



Jaws of Saurodon, skull, etc., of Ichthyodectes, and skull, etc., 

 of Stratodus from the Chalk of Kansas (H. T. Martin coll.). 



Holosteus esocinus, Mesogaster, Naseus rectifrons, Naseus 

 nuchalis, Diodon tenuisjnnus, Gohius macrurus, and Aulo- 

 stoma bolcense, from the Eocene of Monte Bolca. 



Mollusca. — Thirty Cephalopods from the Palseozoic of 

 Cabrieres, Herault, France (C. Escott coll.). 



Fifty-seven European Lower Palseozoic Cephalopoda. 

 Three Cephalopods from the Middle Devonian of the Eifel. 



Five hundred and fifty-four Mollusca from the Carboniferous 

 of Ireland (Joseph Wright coll.). 



Three Jurassic Ammonites from San Pedro, Chile. 



One Brasilina tutcheri from the Jurassic. 



One group of Cyrena from the Wealden. 



One Exogyra from the Lower Greensand. 



One Ammonite from the Neocomian of Switzerland. 



One Ostrea ley')neriei, from the Aptian. Aylesford. 



Mollusca from the Cretaceous of Ireland (J. Wright and 

 G. Donaldson colls.). 



Three Ammonites from the Chalk of Kent. 



About two hundred and forty fossils, chiefly Mollusca, from 

 the Tertiary and Cretaceous of Tunis (L Spath coll.). 



Two hundred and eighty Cretaceous fossils and one hundred 

 and two Post-Pliocene shells from Ireland (J. Wright and 

 G. Donaldson colls.). 



